Friday, 13 November 2015

Mango and Bambang: The Not-a-Pig

Mango is a girl who is good at many things. She
loves to play chess and is good at karate. She is learning to play the clarinet
but needs more practice.

Her life would be lonely if she didn’t have so much
to learn and practice. For Papa spends every moment of every day in his study
balancing books. It is on a Wednesday that Mango comes across an Asian tapir
named Bambang lying on the road, blocking the traffic that everybody thinks is
a pig. Being good at things helps her to persuade him to come with her. He has
run away from tigers and ended up in the big and busy city.

This is the start of a beautiful friendship between
two lonely people that become three when they meet George, the grubby boy up
the tree that loves toffees.

There are problems to face and solve. Persuading
people, especially Collectors of Unusual Things that Bambang is not a pig, is
very hard. But harder still, is finding a bath big enough for Bambang,
persuading him to stay indoors when Mango is at school, and trying to find him
when he wanders off.

This is a delightful story in four parts for the 5-7
ages. The illustrations are by Clara Vulliamy, daughter of Australian writer
and illustrator Shirley Hughes. The book is ideal for bedtime reading in small
portions. It is luxuriously presented in purple and grey colours alone, with
purple framed pages alternating throughout the book, and a jacket identical to
the cover. Themes of friendship, acceptance and kindness move like a mist
within the entertaining storyline.